The present invention is about an extractor/cooler of fine grain size solid loose materials such as heavy ashes produced by fluidized bed boilers, foundry sand, sintered powders, cements, slogs or fine grain size minerals generated in the various industrial processes of burning, baking, sintering, etc.
Today the system more used for the extraction and cooling of the ashes in the fluidized bed boilers, coming from the combustion chambers at temperature close to 800–900° C., is made of a scroll internally and externally cooled with water. The use of said system still has considerable inconvenience, which are hereafter briefly described:
The abovementioned problems and the inconveniences are solved by the extractor/cooler of the present invention having the features recited in the characterizing part of the appended claims.
The characteristics, objects and advantages of the invention will be better highlighted in a not limiting way by the following description and by the annexed drawings corresponding to some embodiments, wherein:
The extractor/cooler 1 described in the present invention uses the extraction and cooling of hot loose materials 3, particularly such as heavy ashes and other combustion products coming from the boiler 4, a driving means with a steel metal belt conveyor 2 appropriately inserted into a sealed metal container 5 and controlled to move through proper powered means (not shown in the figures relative to the present application).
The ash 3 due to the gravitational force leaves the combustion chamber of the boiler 4 through the vertical runner 6 and lays down on the lower metal belt conveyor 2 where it lies on forming a continuous bed moving towards the discharge area. The distance between the belt conveyor 2 and the runner 6 must be such to guarantee the passage of the biggest conceivable bits of the material 3.
During the operation of the system, the runner 6 must be always full of material in order to guarantee the necessary separation between the environment of the combustion chamber of the boiler 4 and the environment of the metal container 5. For this reason, a level gauge acting on the speed of travel of the belt keeps the level constant. Furthermore, if the level of ash of the boiler 4 falls below the critical threshold an on-off valve 8 activates, which by closing itself it prevents the combustion chamber to communicate with the metal container 5.
A valve is assembled on the runner 6, in the discharge area of the material 3 on the metal belt conveyor 2, in order to provide for the following functions:
The thickness of layer of material 3 on the conveyor belt 2 is adjusted with respect to the grain size of the ash and with respect to the specific cooling needs. Once said thickness is defined, the capacity of the ash 3 is metered by varying the speed of travel of the metal belt 2.
The cooling air can be fed inside the metal container 5 through a proper fan or it can also be collected by the delivery of one or more fans of the primary or secondary air which already feed the boiler.
The air intake 11 through which the cooling air flows is located in the lower back area of the metal container 5, before the runner 6 of the material 3.
The air flow is blown in by the intake 11 where a part of it flows on the bottom of the container 5 below the conveyor belt 2 towards the discharge area 7 where is mixed to the first flow, while the remaining part flows through the slots 16 made into the plates of the conveyor belt 2, thus penetrating through the whole thickness of the bed of hot material 3, cooling not only its base but the inner layer as well.
The shape, the number and the arrangement of the slots 16 in the plates of the metal conveyor belt 2 must be defined with respect to the kind, the amount, and mainly the grain size of the conveyed material 3, so as to avoid that this latter would fall either on the lower parts of the belt 2 or on the bottom of the metal container 5.
The portion of air used for the two cooling fractions of the second flow is appropriately metered through a regulating valve 15 placed in the lower part of the metal container 5 next to the discharge area 7.
The heated air can thus be inserted into the combustion chamber of the boiler 4 through the runner 14 mixing it to the primary or secondary combustion air, therefore using again the thermal air recovered during the cooling phase of the hot material 3, or it is possible to eject the air, after its proper filtering, directly into the atmosphere.
The cooling of the ashes 3 also occurs through conductive thermal exchange, as the metal conveyor belt 2 acts like a regenerating heat exchanger, absorbing the heat in the forward run towards the discharge area 7 and yielding it to the air in the return run towards the runner 6.
With respect to the specific operative conditions, if, for example, unloading the ashes at low temperatures, or with high capacities of ashes is needed, when there is no possibility of having a length of the extractor/cooler 1 fit to the cooling needs, increasing the thermal exchange of the conveyed material 3 could turn out to be necessary. This condition can be achieved by applying a number of extensions 18 on the plates of the metal conveyor belt 2 in order to increase the surface of thermal exchange between said conveyor belt 2 and the hot conveyed material 3, thus further raising the cooling. The size, the number and the arrangement of the extensions 18, can vary according to the type of conveyed material and to the specific cooling needs.
In order to increase the degree of cooling of the ash, there is the possibility of cooling the upper and side area of the metal container 5 with a water flow 9 which flows inside the space 10 made in the upper and side part of the metal container 5. As a matter of fact, the hot material transported by the conveyor belt transmits heat by radiance to the metal container in the upper and side part.
Regarding said description, it must be noticed that several modifications, additions, adjustments, variations and substitutions of elements could be made to the illustrative embodiments previously described in an explanatory but not limiting way with other functionally equivalent elements, without falling out of the scope of protection as also recited in the following appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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MI2002A0353 | Feb 2002 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP03/01690 | 2/19/2003 | WO | 00 | 2/4/2005 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO03/071189 | 8/28/2003 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5713345 | Bentsen et al. | Feb 1998 | A |
6082442 | Michelbrink | Jul 2000 | A |
6230633 | Magaldi et al. | May 2001 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050115477 A1 | Jun 2005 | US |